Monday, March 23, 2009
FIAE Chapter 14: Responsive Report Card Formats
This chapter of FIAE is about report cards. If we are using a grade book system that looks for mastery of many different benchmarks then it only makes sense that the report card reflects this. The chapter suggests many ways to sow how a student has progressed in a class on a report card and a few examples of how to reformat a report card to show how a student met each benchmark. This will affect me as a teacher because the grade on the report card will be questioned by parents. They will want to know why their child got a C and what that means for how well they are doing in the class. It affects my class because it means I can give the students, heir future teachers and their parents more productive feedback on their learning. That will help them in years ahead as well.
FIAE Chapter 13: Gradebook Formats for the Differentiated Classroom
Chapter 13 of FIAE is about finding a grading system that works for you. The chapter gives a few examples but stresses the fact that you need to find one that works well for you. This is important and affects my classroom because I will need to find a way to keep track of my student’s leaning in a way that is easy, efficient and tells me a lot about their mastery of the material. This can be hard to do and will probably take a lot of trial and error. It affects my classroom because as a teacher I will need to be able to tell students exactly what they need to work on and explain to parents what their children are doing in my class.
FIAE Chapter 12: Grading Scales
Chapter twelve of FIAE is about grading scales. The chapter describes two kinds the 100 point scale and the 4 point scale. The chapter mostly argues that a 4 point scale is better because it is more difficult to fudge grades, it is easy to link to a rubric so that a student can see where the grade comes from and it more accurately shows mastery than a 100 point scale. These are all good points but a 100 point scale is still the easiest way to grade a quiz or test. However, it is easy to turn one of those grades into a 4 point scale. This affects me because as a teacher I will have to decide what grading scale works best for me and shows the students mastery of the subject in the most accurate and fair way.
FIAE Chapter 11: Six Burning Grading Issues
Chapter eleven of FIAE is about six issues when it comes to grading that teachers struggle with. Obviously there are more than just six but the chapter chooses to only address six of them. The six things include recording a zero or a sixty, grading gifted students, weighting grades, automaticity versus concept attainment, grading students with special needs, and grading late work. The chapter describes all of them and gives a few helpful ideas on how to handle them. This chapter affects me because as a teacher I will also have to be thinking about them when grading my students. Having this chapter is helpful. It affects my classroom a lot as well because grades are the final summary of the work the student has done in my classroom. It is important that they are accurate.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
FIAE Chapter 10: Conditions for Redoing Work for Full Credit
This chapter discusses the conditions for redoing assignments that students didn’t do well on the first time. Most of the conditions are for teacher sanity but a few of them are also to keep the student honest. For example, making parents a part of the process and reserving the right to change the format of the redo. This chapter affects me because it gives me some ideas on how to go about giving my students second opportunities to prove that they know the material without being duped or overrun with work. It affects my class because if my students have the chance to redo an assignment that they had trouble getting done due to outside circumstances they can without having to beg and plead and explain the situation they may not want me to be aware of. It would be unfair to not allow a student a redo because they were embarrassed to tell me they were at the hospital or a relative died.
FIAE Chapter 9: Ten Approaches to AVoid When Differentiating Assessment and Grading
This chapter is a list of 10 different things that teachers should avoid when differentiating grading and assessment. The chapter thoroughly explains all of the reasons why these things should be avoided. The list includes avoiding grading on a curve, avoiding recording zeros, avoiding extra credit, avoiding scaffolding and avoiding grading homework, to name a few. The list is a good way for me to look at things that teachers often do that don’t work in the classroom. It is kind of like getting experience with using these practices without actually having to try them out myself. It affects my class because now that I understand a few things to avoid and why I don’t have to spend time trying them out for myself. I can work at avoiding them and know that it is what is best for my students.
FIAE Chapter 8: Why do we Grade, and What About Effort, Attendance, and Behavior?
Chapter 8 of FIAE is about including effort, attendance and behavior in the grade. Many teachers disagree about whether or not these should be included in the grade. The chapter gives many arguments for both sides. This means that as a teacher I will have to decide whether or not to include this, decide how to grade it and how much of the grade it will be worth. I’m not sure that I would include effort or behavior in my grades but I probably would include participation because it is difficult in an English class to teach students how to analyze without allowing them to pick each other’s brains.
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